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{{about||the 4Him album|Face the Nation (album)|the Kid 'N Play album|Face the Nation (Kid 'n Play album)}}
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{{current sport-related|image=TVfuture icon.svg|mini=1|America's Got Talent (season 4)}}
{{Infobox television
{{Infobox Television
| show_name = America's Got Talent
| show_name = Face The Nation with Bob Schieffer
| image = [[File:America's Got Talent logo.png|250px]]
| image = [[Image:CBS News Face the Nation.JPG|250px]]
| caption = Logo since season 4
| image_size =
| format = [[Reality television|Reality talent show]]
| caption =
| runtime = 60-120 minutes
| genre =
| company = [[FremantleMedia North America]]<br>[[Syco|SYCOtv]]
| creator = [[Frank Stanton]]
| distributor = [[FremantleMedia Enterprises]]
| developer =
| creator = [[Simon Cowell]]<br>[[Ken Warwick]]<br>Cécile Frot-Coutaz<br>Jason Raff
| presenter = [[Bob Schieffer]] <br> (1991-present)
| starring =
| executive_producer = [[Simon Cowell]]<br>[[Ken Warwick]]<br>Jason Raff
| voices =
| presenter = [[Nick Cannon]] (2009–present)<br>[[Jerry Springer]] (2007-2008)<br> [[Regis Philbin]] (2006)
| narrated = John Wilcox
| judges = [[Piers Morgan]]<br>[[Brandy Norwood]] (2006)<br>[[David Hasselhoff]] (2006-2009)<br>[[Sharon Osbourne]] (2007–present)<br>[[Howie Mandel]] (2010-present)
| theme_music_composer =
| filmed = [[Los Angeles, California]]
| opentheme =
| picture_format = [[480i]] ([[NTSC]]),<br>[[1080i]] ([[HDTV]]) (since 2009)
| country = United States
| endtheme =
| network = [[NBC]]
| composer =
| first_aired = {{start date|2006|6|21}}
| country = {{USA}}
| last_aired = present
| language = English
| num_episodes = 60
| num_seasons =
| num_episodes =
| list_episodes =
| producer = Arlene Weisskopf
| executive_producer = Carin Pratt
| location = Washington D.C
| camera =
| runtime = 30 minutes
| company = [[CBS News|CBS News Productions]]
| network = [[CBS]]
| picture_format =
| audio_format =
| first_run =
| first_aired = November 7, 1954
| last_aired = present
| preceded_by =
| followed_by =
| related =
| website = http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/ftn/main3460.shtml
}}
}}
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'''''America's Got Talent''''' is a [[United Kingdom|British]]-owned American [[reality television series]] on the [[NBC]] [[television network]]. It is a talent show that features singers, dancers, magicians, comedians and other performers of all ages competing for the advertised top prize of US$1 million. The show debuted in June 2006 for the summer television season. Starting in the third season, the ''Talent'' top prize included US$1 million, payable in a financial annuity over forty years (or the [[present value|present cash value]] of such annuity), and a show as the headliner on the [[Las Vegas Strip]].
{{USSundayMorningNewsShows}}
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'''''Face the Nation with Bob Schieffer''''' is an [[United States|American]] [[Sunday-morning interview shows|Sunday-morning political interview show]] which premiered on the [[CBS]] [[television network]] on November 7, 1954. It is one of the [[List_of_longest_running_U.S._television_series|longest-running news programs]] in the history of [[television]]. At 30 minutes, ''Face the Nation ''is the shortest of the Sunday talk shows. Excluding commercial breaks, the show has a duration of approximately 21 and a half minutes.
The show concept can be traced back to the American talent contest ''[[Major Bowes Amateur Hour]]'', broadcast in the United States in the 1930s and 1940s.{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}} Among its significant features were that it gave an opportunity to talented amateurs or unknown performers, with the results decided by an audience vote. The format is a popular one and has often been reworked for television in the United States and the United Kingdom.


Each Sunday the moderator interviews newsmakers on the latest issues and delivers a short topical commentary at the end of the broadcast. The program broadcasts from [[Washington, D.C.]] Guests include government leaders, politicians, and international figures in the news. [[CBS News]] correspondents and other contributors engage the guests in a roundtable discussion focusing on current topics. The program broadcasts on the [[CBS]] Television Network, usually at 10:30 AM ET, right after ''[[CBS News Sunday Morning]]''. Local affiliates are free to air the show at the time of their choosing, usually before noon local time. The show is also broadcast on a delay on a handful of radio affiliates through the [[CBS Radio Network]].
The current incarnation was created by [[Simon Cowell]], and was originally due to be a 2005 British series called ''[[Paul O'Grady]]'s Got Talent''<ref>[http://www.ipo.gov.uk/tm/t-find/t-find-number?detailsrequested=C&trademark=2398862 Trade marks - find by number<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> but was postponed due to O'Grady's acrimonious split with broadcaster [[ITV]]. As such, the American version became the first full series of the [[Got Talent]] franchise.


==Moderators==
Despite being heavily involved in the show's production, [[Simon Cowell]] does not appear as a judge. This is due to the conditions of his ''[[American Idol]]'' contract. However he does appear as a judge on ''[[Britain's Got Talent]]''. ''America's Got Talent'' began airing season one in the United Kingdom on [[ITV1]] on 22 June 2007, [[TV3 Ireland]] on July 2007 and in New Zealand on [[Prime Television New Zealand|Prime Television]] on 9 July 2007. The third season of ''Talent'' premiered on [[ITV2]] beginning 4 June 2009.<ref>[http://www.itv.com/PressCentre/AmericasGotTalent/AmericasGotTalentS3Ep1/default.html America's Got Talent S3 Ep1]</ref>
*[[Bill Shadel]] (1954&ndash;1955)
*[[Stuart Novins]] (1955&ndash;1960)
*[[Howard K. Smith]] (1960&ndash;1961)
*[[Paul Niven]] (1961&ndash;1965)
*[[Martin Agronsky]] (1965&ndash;1969)
*[[George Herman (journalist)|George Herman]] (1969&ndash;1983)
*[[Lesley Stahl]] (1983&ndash;1991)
*[[Bob Schieffer]] (May 1991&ndash;present)


===Ratings===
==Selection Process==
April 19, 2009
===Pre-Audition Process===
All four networks grew week-to-week in Total Viewers, with just MTP up in the demo. But, year-to-year, ABC's This Week cut the Total Viewer gap for the 12 consecutive week. CBS grew 20% in Total Viewers compared to the same week last year, ABC was up 14% while NBC was down 1%.
Beginning with Season 3, before the auditions in front of the judges are held, there are separate untelevised producers' auditions which come to various cities across the United States, some which will host the auditions held in theaters, and some which usually only host the producers' auditions. In Seasons 3-4, this round was held several days before the judges' audition in cities that would also host the televised second round. In Season 5, this round will be held several months before the second audition round. Acts that have made it through the producers' audition will then audition in front of the judges and a live audience.


Total Viewers: NBC: 3,440,000 / CBS: 2,940,000 / ABC: 2,890,000 / FOX: 1,310,000
===Season 1 Process===
For the [[audition]] round, each of the three judges has a button in front of them that they can press when they do not want the act to continue; the button rings an electronic bell (the same one heard for passed spins on ''[[Press Your Luck]]'') and a large red X with the judge's name lights up over the stage. A louder buzzer (the same one heard for "strikes" on ''[[Family Feud]]'') indicates the third judge's button was pressed, and the contestant's performance is terminated. Then, the judges deliberate over the act and decide if it gets through to the live semi-finals. In the semi-finals, the judges have X's and checks. Acts are divided into four groups of either 14 or 15, and only 10 of those acts in the group perform. They do not have the power to terminate an act in the middle of his/her performance. At the end of the performance, the judges give the act a check for approval, and an X if they did not like the act. At the end of the episode, the judges would pick an act and automatically move them through to the live finale. Then, the viewers at home would vote another act through to the finale, and that act would be announced in a live results show the next day. There was also a fifth wild card episode, where the judges picked ten acts who were previously eliminated and give them one more chance to perform. In the finale, there is no judges' choice, and the voting is entirely handed over to the viewers.


25-54 demo: NBC: 1,250,000 / ABC: 940,000 / CBS: 930,000 / FOX: 430,000
===Season 2 Process===
The audition process for the second season is very similar to that of the first, except that only a buzzer sounds when the X is pressed. When all the judges X's have been pressed, a lonely blue spotlight centers on the act, indicating they've been struck out. Unlike the previous season, the acts who pass the auditions then attend a [[Las Vegas, Nevada|Las Vegas]] bootcamp, where they have a chance to perfect their craft. At this point, acts are divided into two groups, music, and variety. The music acts consist of singers and instrument players. The variety group consists of other acts. The music acts performs first, followed by the variety acts. Each act will perform for three minutes, and their performance will not be terminated, as the judges have no buttons to press. After each group has finished, the judges will split the groups into lines, either a yes line, or a no line. The ones who the judges said yes to will go to the short list of 35 acts. The acts which the judges have said no to will go home. After that, the judges will cut the short list of 35 to 20 final acts.


==Face the Nation in HD==
In the semi-final episodes, the 20 acts will be first split into two groups of 10. America will vote and eliminate five out of the first group, then five out of the second. The remaining 10 will perform head to head in the next round, where the field will be narrowed each week until there are four, which the viewing audience at home votes on. In the second season, the judges may terminate a performance any time they want with an X. The checks are eliminated from the game and the judges may only have comments. There is no judges' choice in this season, as the voting is entirely handed over to the viewers.


Face the Nation is expected to begin broadcasting in [[high-definition television|High Definition]] in the near future.
===Season 3 Process===
Season 3 is similar to Season 2 in the audition process, except that the auditions are held in large theaters across the nation, there are three more audition episodes, and two more audition sites. The Las Vegas boot camp continues, but they are divided into more groups, such as ventriloquists, male singers, female singers, opera, instrumental music, bands, and other variety acts. There are forty acts that pass through, instead of twenty. The semi-final process consists of shows on both Tuesday and Wednesday. Ten of the top forty acts perform each of the two nights for two weeks. five are eliminated each week by public vote. However, the contestants that come in fifth and sixth place must face the judges' decision. The panel will eliminate the act they wish not to put through. Afterward, the Top 20 is formed from the Top 40.

Following the Top 20, the American viewing audience will eliminate ten acts from this group, creating a Top 10. The Top 10 then perform and a Top 5 is formed after the American viewing audience votes. Afterward, The Top Five perform and a finale episode concludes the season the next week. In Season 3, when all three judges pressed their X's to terminate a performance in the semi-finals, the act is allowed to continue, but must end early.

===Season 4 Process===
Season 4 carries over Season 3's audition process. Out of the over 160 acts that passed through the preliminary auditions, 48 went on to perform in the live shows. This season, the callbacks were renamed " The Vegas Verdicts". Unlike previous seasons, the acts were not given a chance to perform a second time, unless prompted by the judges to as a challenge. The judges re-watched audition tapes and created a Top 40 based on the acts' preliminary performances, similar to the format used on sister show ''[[Britain's Got Talent]]''. However, it was revealed during the first performance show that the judges, when prompted by executive producer Simon Cowell, called back eight acts that they previously had cut. This brought the total number of acts up to 48. Last season, the acts who passed through were divided into four groups, who performed over the course of two weeks with the acts who passed through from the previous night being announced before the next group of acts' performances. This year, each group in the Top 48 will be divided into four groups of 12, but only one group performs per week, as a separate results show for the group will air the next day. This season will be the first to feature results episodes lasting one hour on a weekly basis since Season 1.

During the performances episodes, if all three judges buzz an act, the act is forced to end, unlike last season, where it could continue on for a short time. In the results episodes, five best acts from each group of twelve proceed to the semi-finals - four acts are determined solely by viewers' votes, the judges decide between acts with the fifth and sixth highest viewers' vote totals. The twelve acts are presented to the audience in groups of two or three (usually similar acts - e.g. dancers, children - are put together) and then the host announces which of them move forward and which of them have been eliminated. The final group are acts in the fifth and sixth places and the judges pick one of them by majority voting. At no time is the audience made aware of how many viewers' votes each act received.

In the semi-finals, the twenty acts who passed through the quarter-finals are divided into groups of 10. One of these groups perform each week, with a performance episode followed by the results the following day. Only four acts were supposed to pass through to the finals each week. Three are determined solely by viewers' votes, but the fourth and fifth place acts must face the judges' decision. However, in one case, the judges passed through both performers, as they could not make a decision. In the other case, the top five acts were passed through. Instead of previous seasons, where the finals contain four or five acts, this season the finale will contain ten acts.

==Season 1 (2006)==
{{Main|America's Got Talent (season 1)}}
In June 2006, NBC announced the new show. The audition tour took place in June. Auditions were held in the following locations: [[Los Angeles, California]], [[New York City, New York]], [[Chicago, Illinois]], and [[Atlanta, Georgia]]. Some early ads for the show implied that the winning act would also headline a show at a [[casino]], possibly in [[Las Vegas, Nevada|Las Vegas]]; however, this was replaced with $1,000,000 due to concerns of minors playing in Las Vegas, should one become a champion. More than 12 million viewers watched the season premiere (which is more than ''[[American Idol]]'' got during its premiere back in 2002). The two-hour broadcast was the night's most-watched program on U.S. television and the highest-rated among viewers aged 18 to 49 (the prime-time audience that matters most to advertisers), [[Nielsen Media Research]] reported.<ref>[http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=entertainmentNews&storyID=2006-06-23T013703Z_01_N22404440_RTRUKOC_0_US-LEISURE-TALENT.xml Reuters]</ref>. On the season finale, there was an unaired segment that was scheduled to appear after [[Aly and AJ]]. The segment featured [[Tom Green]] dressing in a [[parrot]] costume, and squawking with a live parrot, to communicate telepathically. Green then proceeded to fly up above the audience, shooting confetti streamers out of his costume onto the crowd below.

In season one, the show was hosted by [[Regis Philbin]] and judged by actor [[David Hasselhoff]], singer [[Brandy (entertainer)|Brandy]], and journalist [[Piers Morgan]].

===Winner===
* [[Bianca Ryan]] (Viewers' choice): An 11-year-old singer

===Other finalists===
====Top Three====
The runners-up each won a [[Dodge Caliber]]
* The Millers (Judges' choice): A musical group consisting of two brothers. Cole, age 20, plays guitar, and L.D., age 12, plays harmonica
* All That (Judges' choice): A clogging ensemble

====Top Five====
* [[Taylor Ware]] (Viewers' choice): An 11-year-old yodeller
* [[Celtic Spring]] (Viewers' choice): A family Irish step dancing/fiddling act

====Finalists====
* Realis (Judges' choice): An [[acrobatics]] mixed pair performing hand-to-hand balancing and releases
* [[At Last (band)|At Last]] (Viewers' choice): An [[a cappella]] act, performing [[Rhythm and blues|R&B]] songs with a hip hop beat
* [[Rappin' Granny]] (real name: Vivian Smallwood) (Judges' choice): A 73-year-old [[rapping|rapper]]
* [[The Passing Zone]] (Judges' choice): A comedy/juggling act
* [[Quick-change#David and Dania|Quick Change]] (Viewers' choice): Clothes-changing magic act

===Season 1 Elimination Chart===

In the final round, the judges were still allowed to judge, but only the audience can decide the winners.
Italics indicate that the act received three checks from the judges.

{| class="wikitable"
|-
| colspan="4" align="center" bgcolor="#CCCCCC" | Season 1 finals
|-
!width="125px" | Contestant
!width="160px" | Chosen by
!width="160px" | Celebrity coach
!width="125px" | Result <br> (August 17, 2006)
|-
| 1. ''[[At Last]]''
| Viewers (Semi-finals part 2)
| [[Chaka Khan]]
| Bottom 5
|-
| 2. David & Dania - [[Quick Change]]
| Viewers (Wild Card)
| [[Steve Valentine]]
| Bottom 5
|-
| 3. [[Rappin' Granny]]
| Judges (Semi-finals part 3)
| [[Master P]]
| Bottom 5
|-
| 4. [[Bianca Ryan]]
| Viewers (Semi-finals part 3)
| [[Yolanda Adams]]
| Winner
|-
| 5. ''[[All That]]''
| Judges (Wild Card)
| Dave Scott (R&B choreographer)
| Top 3 (runner-up)
|-
| 6. ''[[Taylor Ware]]''
| Viewers (Semi-finals part 1)
| Tom McBryde (country music arranger)
| Top 5
|-
| 7. ''Jon & Owen - [[The Passing Zone]]''
| Judges (Semi-finals part 4)
| [[Penn & Teller]]
| Bottom 5
|-
| 8. [[Celtic Spring]]
| Viewers (Semi-finals part 4)
| Tara Barry ([[Riverdance]] lead dancer)
| Top 5
|-
| 9. ''[[Realis]]''
| Judges (Semi-finals part 2)
| Gene Lubas ([[Cirque du Soleil]] choreographer)
| Bottom 5
|-
| 10. [[The Millers]]
| Judges (Semi-finals part 1)
| [[John Popper]]
| Top 3 (runner-up)
|}
</center>

==Season 2 (2007)==
{{Main|America's Got Talent (season 2)}}
[[Image:America's Got Talent.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Logo of ''America's Got Talent'' used during Seasons 2 and 3]]
After initially announcing in May 2006 that the second season of ''America's Got Talent'' would debut in January 2007 at 8 PM on Sunday nights, with no separate results show, the network has changed its mind and pushed the show back to the summer, where the first season had great success. This move will keep the show out of direct competition with ''[[American Idol]]'', which has a similar premise and is more popular. In ''AGT'''s place, another reality-based talent show, ''[[Grease: You're The One That I Want]]'', began airing on Sunday nights in the same timeslot on NBC beginning in January.<ref>[http://www.nbcumv.com/release_detail.nbc/broadcasttelevision-20061129135036-nbcsmid-season200.html NBC’s mid-season 2006–07 schedule]</ref> In March 2007, NBC announced that Philbin would not return as host of the show, and that [[Jerry Springer]] would succeed him as host,<ref>[http://www.thefutoncritic.com/news.aspx?id=20070305nbc02 Popular Television Talk-Show Host Jerry Springer Named Host of NBC's 'America'S Got Talent']</ref> with [[Sharon Osbourne]] (formerly a judge on Cowell's UK show ''[[The X Factor (UK)|The X Factor]]'') succeeding Brandy as a judge. This means the show, ironically, has two British judges and one American one.

The second season has no results show, replaced by results on the performance show night instead; in addition, each Tuesday broadcast was repeated (along with ''[[The Singing Bee (US game show)|The Singing Bee]]'' episode that followed the 90-minute editions of ''AGT'') by NBC the following Saturday.

The finale of the season was shown Tuesday, August 21, 2007, and the results are shown below:

===Winner===
* [[Terry Fator]] - [[Ventriloquism|ventriloquist]]/[[Impressionist (entertainment)|impressionist]]/[[singer]] from Mesquite, Texas

===Other finalists===
====Final Four====
* [[Cas Haley]] - singer/guitarist from Arlington, Texas, Second place
* [[Butterscotch (performer)|Butterscotch]] - [[beatboxing|beatboxer]]/singer from [[Davis, California]], Third place
* [[Julienne Irwin]] - 14-year old singer from [[Bel Air, Harford County, Maryland]], Fourth place

====Final Eight====
* Jason Pritchett - singer/guitar player from [[Independence, Missouri]], Top 8 contestant
* The Glamazons - group of plus-sized female [[burlesque]] singers, Top 8 contestant
* Robert Hatcher - singer from [[Cincinnati, Ohio]], Top 8 contestant
* Sideswipe - [[Martial Arts]] group; made an appearance in Season 1, Top 8 contestant

====Top Ten====
* The Calypso Tumblers - tumbling act, Top 10 contestant
* The Duttons - family band, Top 10 contestant

==Season 3 (2008)==
{{Main|America's Got Talent (season 3)}}

NBC announced in August 2007 that the network had renewed the show for a third season. Auditions took place in [[Charlotte]], [[Nashville, Tennessee|Nashville]], [[Orlando, Florida|Orlando]], New York, [[Dallas]], Los Angeles, [[Atlanta]] and Chicago from January to April. A televised [[MySpace]] audition also took place. [[Sharon Osbourne]], [[Piers Morgan]] and [[David Hasselhoff]] returned as judges. [[Jerry Springer]] also returned as host. The show premiered on June 17, 2008.

Unlike Season 2, ''Talent'' became a substantially larger reality competition in Season 3, with seven weeks of auditions, compared to the four weeks of auditions in the previous seasons. Also, the auditions are held in well-known theaters across the nation, unlike the previous year. A substantial change is the new title card, which features the American flag as background. The X's match the ones on [[Britain's Got Talent]] as does the judges table. Like the previous season, the [[Las Vegas, Nevada|Las Vegas]] callbacks continued, but there were forty acts selected to compete in the live rounds, instead of twenty. Another difference from the previous season included separate results show episodes.

The show took a hiatus for two and a half weeks for the [[2008 Summer Olympics]], but returned with the live rounds on August 26, 2008.

===Winner===
* [[Neal E. Boyd]] - An [[opera]] [[singer]] who sells insurance for a living in [[Sikeston]], [[Missouri]], discovering [[opera]] music in his senior year of high school

===Other Finalists===
====Final Five====
* [[Eli Mattson]]- A pianist and singer. Finished in second place
* [[Nuttin' But Stringz]] - A hip-hop classical fusion act. Finished in third place
* [[Donald Braswell II|Donald Braswell]] - An opera singer. Won wild card, finished in fourth place
* Queen Emily - A soul singer. Finished in fifth place

====Top 10 Contestants====
* Paul Salos - A Frank Sinatra impersonator
* Kaitlyn Maher - A four-year-old singer
* The Wright Kids - A bluegrass group consisting of three children
* Jessica Price - A pop/folk singer
* Joseph Hall - A 'young' Elvis impersonator

===Las Vegas Wildcard===
A member of the Russian Bar Trio, one of the top forty final acts, was injured, resulting in the withdrawal of the act from the competition. The judges selected eight acts that the American viewing public decided on at [[NBC]].com. The winner of the Wildcard was Donald Braswell II.

===Season 3 Elimination Chart===
<center>
{| border="2" cellpadding="4" style="background:gray; border:1px solid gray; border-collapse:collapse; margin:0 1em 1em 0; text-align:center;"
|-
|+ Legend
|-
| style="background:cyan; padding-left: 1em;" width="20%" | Winner
| style="background:limegreen; padding-left: 1em;" width="20%" | Runner-Up
| style="background:red; padding-left: 1em;" width="20%" | Eliminated
| style="background:yellow; padding-left: 1em;" width="20%" | Judge's Choice
|}

</center>
<center>
{|class="wikitable" width=65%
|width=30% colspan="2" align="right"|''Stage:''
|colspan="1" bgcolor="CCCCCC" align="Center"|Top 20
|colspan="1" bgcolor="palegoldenrod" align="Center"|Top 10
|colspan="1" bgcolor="C48BBB" align="Center"|Finals
|-
|colspan="2" align="right"|''Week:''
| align="center"|9/11
| align="center"|9/18
| align="center"|10/1
|-
!Place
!Contestant
!colspan="14" align="center"|Result
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="cyan" |1
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|[[Neal E. Boyd]]
||SAFE
| SAFE
| bgcolor="cyan"|WINNER
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="limegreen" |2
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|[[Eli Mattson]]
||SAFE
|SAFE
|bgcolor="limegreen"|RUNNER-UP
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="palegoldenrod" |3
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|[[Nuttin' But Stringz]]
||SAFE
|SAFE
| bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="palegoldenrod" |4
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|[[Donald Braswell II]]
||SAFE
| SAFE
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="palegoldenrod" |5
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|Queen Emily
||SAFE
|SAFE
| bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="yellow" rowspan="5"|6-10
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|Jessica Price
|bgcolor="yellow"|JC
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|Paul Salos
||SAFE
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|Kaitlyn Maher
||SAFE
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|-
| align="center" bgcolor="white"|Joseph Hall
| bgcolor="yellow"|JC
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|The Wright Kids
||SAFE
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="gray" rowspan="10"|11-20
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|Jonathan Burkin
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM JC
|
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|Tapping Dads
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|Sarah Lenore
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|The Taubl Family
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|SickStep
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|Extreme Dance FX
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|The Cadence
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|The James Gang
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|Daniel Jens
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM JC
|
|
|-
|align="center" bgcolor="white"|ZOOperstars!
|bgcolor="red"|ELIM
|
|
|-
|}
</center>

==Season 4 (2009)==
{{Main|America's Got Talent (season 4)}}

[[NBC]] announced that ''America's Got Talent'' was renewed for a fourth season. Auditions this year were held in more than 9 major cities including [[New York City]], [[Los Angeles]], [[Chicago]], [[Washington D.C.|Washington DC]], [[Atlanta]], [[Miami]], [[Seattle]]/ [[Tacoma]], [[Boston]] and [[Houston]]. Los Angeles Auditions kicked off the tour January 29-31 at the Los Angeles Convention Center, followed by Atlanta auditions February 7-8. New York and Miami auditions were held during March. Tacoma auditions were held April 25 and 26. In addition to live auditions and the ability to send in a home audition tape, Season 4 offered the opportunity for acts to upload their video direct at NBC.com/agt with their registration. This year's host is [[Nick Cannon]], who replaced [[Jerry Springer]]. Springer says he cannot host due to other commitments.<ref>[http://www.eonline.com/uberblog/b99189_nick_cannons_got_talent.html?sid=rss_topstories&utm_source=eonline&utm_medium=rssfeeds&utm_campaign=rss_topstories Nick Cannon's Got Talent] E! Online, February 9, 2009</ref> All Season 3 judges have announced they are returning for the fourth season.<ref>[http://blogs.tampabay.com/media/2009/02/nick-cannon-rep.html Nick Cannon replaces Jerry Springer as host of America's Got Talent] tampabay.com, February 9, 2009</ref> The fourth season premiered on Tuesday, June 23.

Season 4 of ''America's Got Talent'' borrowed the audition process from Season 3, but renamed the 'Las Vegas Callbacks' to 'Vegas Verdicts'. This was the first season since Season 1 where results episodes last one hour on a regular basis. The title card this year features bands of the American flag and stars waving around the America's Got Talent logo.

At the end of Las Vegas Week, [[Simon Cowell]], the executive producer of ''Talent'', called the judges by phone while they were flying back to [[Los Angeles]], stating that he was unhappy with some of the eliminations the judges made. Cowell stated that this season had a lot of talent and presented the judges with eight acts he thought America should see again. As a result, two wild card acts performed each week along with the ten already scheduled to perform, expanding the Top 40 to the Top 48.

On September 16, 2009, [[Kevin Skinner]] was named the winner of America's Got Talent for season 4. His grand prize was one million dollars and a headline show at the [[Planet Hollywood]] Casino and Resort on the Las Vegas Strip.

=== Finals, Elimination Chart ===
Here is the chart for the finals of the fourth season of America's Got Talent.
{| class="wikitable" style="height:2.6em"
|-
!Key
|<span style="background-color:gold;border:1px solid darkgray;display:block;float:left;height:20px;width:20px;vertical-align:middle;margin-right:5px;">&nbsp;</span> Winner
|<span style="background-color:orange;border:1px solid darkgray;display:block;float:left;height:20px;width:20px;vertical-align:middle;margin-right:5px;">&nbsp;</span> Runner-Up
|<span style="background-color:lightgreen;border:1px solid darkgray;display:block;float:left;height:20px;width:20px;vertical-align:middle;margin-right:5px;">&nbsp;</span> Finished in Third Place
|<span style="background-color:cyan;border:1px solid darkgray;display:block;float:left;height:20px;width:20px;vertical-align:middle;margin-right:5px;">&nbsp;</span> Finished in Fourth Place
|<span style="background-color:red;border:1px solid darkgray;display:block;float:left;height:20px;width:20px;vertical-align:middle;margin-right:5px;">&nbsp;</span> Finished in Fifth Place
|}

{| class="wikitable"
|-
| colspan="4" align="center" bgcolor="#CCCCCC" | Finals, September 14-16, 2009
|-
!width="15px" | Order
!width="125px" | Contestant
!width="450px" | Performance Description
!width="100px" | Result <br> (September 16, 2009)
|-
| style="background-color:red"|1
| style="background-color:red"|Voices of Glory
| style="background-color:red"|Sibling singers; sang "[[Greatest Love of All]]" by [[Whitney Houston]]
| style="background-color:red"|5th Place
|-
| 2
| Hairo Torres
| Contortionist dancer; danced to "[[Puttin' on the Ritz]]" by [[Rufus Wainwright]] and "[[Closer (Ne-Yo song)|Closer]]" by [[Ne-Yo]]
| Eliminated
|-
| 3
| Lawrence Beamen
| Bass singer; sang "[[You're the First, the Last, My Everything]]" by [[Barry White]]
| Eliminated
|-
| style="background-color:orange"|4
| style="background-color:orange"|[[Bárbara Padilla]]
| style="background-color:orange"|Opera singer; sang "[[O mio babbino caro|O Mio Babbino Caro]]" by [[Giacomo Puccini]]
| style="background-color:orange"|Runner-Up
|-
| 5
| Fab Five
| Sister cloggers; danced to "[[Circus (song)|Circus]]" by [[Britney Spears]]
| Eliminated
|-
| style="background-color:cyan"|6
| style="background-color:cyan"|Texas Tenors
| style="background-color:cyan"|Country–classical singers; sang "[[My Way (song)|My Way]]" by [[Frank Sinatra]]
| style="background-color:cyan"|4th Place
|-
| 7
| Drew Stevyns
| Singer (and guitarist); sang "[[I'll Stand By You]]" by [[The Pretenders]]
| Eliminated
|-
| 8
| Grandma Lee
| Stand-up comedienne; performed a varied routine, picking on her children, her (fictional) ex-husband, Piers Morgan and Simon Cowell
| Eliminated
|-
| style="background-color:gold"|9
| style="background-color:gold"|[[Kevin Skinner]]
| style="background-color:gold"|Country singer; sang "[[I Don't Want to Miss a Thing]]" by [[Aerosmith]]
| style="background-color:gold"|Winner
|-
| style="background-color:lightgreen"|10
| style="background-color:lightgreen"|{{nowrap|[[Recycled Percussion]]}}
| style="background-color:lightgreen"|Junkyard percussionists; played "[[Wipe Out (song)|Wipe Out]]" by [[The Surfaris]]
|style="background-color:lightgreen;color:black;"|3rd Place
|}

==Season 5 (2010)==
NBC has announced that the show has been renewed for a fifth season. There is speculation that NBC could consider moving the show to the fall, after rival series ''[[So You Think You Can Dance]]'' transferred from the summer to fall season in 2009.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/25/business/media/25talent.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1252173970-6VYf9E8Qk0uFOI76jyCLJA America's Got Talent - In Summer Only ''NBC Benches Heavy Hitter for Fall''] NYTimes.com, July 24, 2009</ref>

The first round of auditions in front of the producers was held October 17-18, 2009 at [[McCormick Place]] in [[Chicago]], October 25-26, 2009 at the [[Pennsylvania Convention Center]] in [[Philadelphia]], and October 31-November 1, 2009 at the [[Jacob K. Javits Convention Center]] in [[New York City]]. There will also be auditions in [[New Jersey]], but the date and audition city are still unknown.<ref>[http://americasgottalentauditions.com/new/cities 2009-2010 America's Got Talent Audition Cities] Official America's Got Talent Audition Site</ref>

David Hasselhoff will not be participating in the 2010 season as he was released from the show in January 2010, following the announcement that he will host a new television show in the works. <ref>[http://www.tvguide.com/News/Hasselhoff-Departing-Talent-1013457.aspx TV Guide: "David Hasselhoff Departing America's Got Talent", January 6, 2010.]</ref> Comedian and ''[[Deal or No Deal (U.S. game show)|Deal or No Deal]]'' host [[Howie Mandel]] will replace Hasselhoff as judge.<ref>[http://www.tvguide.com/News/Howie-Mandel-Joins-1013555.aspx TV Guide: "Howie Mandel Joins America's Got Talent", January 10, 2010.]</ref>

==America's Got Talent Live==
America's Got Talent Live will be a show on the [[Las Vegas Strip]] airing Wednesday through Sunday at the [[Planet Hollywood]] Casino and Resort in Las Vegas. It is expected to feature the final ten acts which made it to the Season 4 Finale. It is confirmed that the former host of ''Talent'', Jerry Springer, will emcee.<ref>[http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hFUgk85kQ8sH60p1SMNV1vn9y_2wD9AEUJDG0 Jerry Springer] Associated Press</ref>

==Ratings==
The performance shows are rated [[TV-14]] and the results shows are rated [[TV-PG]].

===Season 1 Ratings===
When the show first aired in 2006, its ratings outpaced every other broadcast of the night and of the week. Regular TV audiences averaged 10 million viewers a night, giving NBC an average 6.0/10 rating every Tuesday that summer, higher than that of [[CBS]], [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]], and [[Fox Broadcasting Company|Fox]]. Total ratings exceeded, by over one million viewers, those of [[Fox Broadcasting Company|Fox]]'s hit reality show, ''[[So You Think You Can Dance]]''.

===Season 2 Ratings===
In 2007, the show was the summer's most watched TV program, averaging 12.0 million viewers per night on its second season{{Citation needed|date=May 2008}}.

===Season 3 Ratings===
In the third season of ''Talent'', average viewers rose to over 12.5 million, and its rating to around a 7.9/13, [[Nielsen Media Research]] reported, again making it the number one show for summer of 2008. The highest rated episode of the third season was the [[MySpace]] auditions with 8.1/13 and 13.61 million viewers. However, the Season 3 finale drew only 12.55 million viewers, dropping it below ''[[Criminal Minds]]'' (with 14.5 million viewers the same night) and [[CSI: NY]] (at 14.67 million viewers).<ref>[http://www.tvguide.com/news/Ratings-CBS-NBC-19371.aspx Ratings: CBS and NBC Kick Some Addison] TVGuide.com, 2 October 2008</ref>

===Season 4 Ratings===
In the summer of 2009, ratings for ''Talent'' were Number 1 in both overall viewers and the 18-49 key demographic, making it the number one show for the summer season of that year. The most watched episode of ''AGT'' was the finale of Season 4, with 15.5 million viewers. During its first live shows of the fourth season, ''Talent'' had one of its highest ratings in the 18-49 key demographic to date, a 3.6/11, only topped by an audition episode earlier the same season, where it posted a 3.7/11.<ref>{{cite news|http://tvbythenumbers.com/2009/08/11/nbc-ranks-2-for-the-week-in-viewers-and-ties-for-1-in-adults-25-54/24607|title=NBC Ranks Number 2 for the week in viewers and ties for Number 1 in adults 25-54|date=11 August 2009|accessdate=11 August 2009}}</ref> During the first weeks of the fall season, a results show of ''Talent'' performed well against the season premiere of [[So You Think You Can Dance]] and the highly promoted world premiere of [[Glee (TV series)|Glee]], posting the most viewers of the night, with 9.7 million viewers, compared to only 6.5 million viewers for ''Dance'' and 7.1 million viewers for ''Glee''. On the two night Season 4 finale, ''AGT'' received its highest viewing audience in all four seasons, with an average of 13.84 million viewers and an 8.5/13 rating/share over its two hour broadcast for the performances show. In the second hour leading into the premiere of [[The Jay Leno Show]], ''Talent'' jumped to over 14.9 million viewers and a 9.1/14 rating/share, making it the second-highest rated broadcast after [[The Jay Leno Show]] since the ''American Idol'' finale in May 2009. The season 4 finale of ''AGT'' was the highest rated episode in the entire series of the show, where it averaged 15.5 million viewers and a 3.5/10 rating/share in the 18-49 demographic, higher than FOX's ''Glee'', which averaged only 6.7 million viewers and a 3.1/8, and ''So You Think You Can Dance'', which had 5.7 million viewers and a 2.5/7. On average, Season 4 of ''Talent'' has had the highest viewership in the entire series.

==See also==
*[[Got Talent series]]
*[[Idol series]]

==References==
{{reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/ftn/main3460.shtml ''Face The Nation'' Official Website]
* {{official|http://www.nbc.com/Americas_Got_Talent/}}
* {{imdb title|0759364}}
* {{imdb title|0361178|Face The Nation with Bob Schieffer}}
* {{tv.com|58710}}
* {{tv.com|30873|Face The Nation with Bob Schieffer}}
* [http://www.centropian.com/entertainment/TV/AmericasGotTallent/index.html America and Britain Have Talent at Centropian]


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Revision as of 22:26, 17 January 2010

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America's Got Talent
File:CBS News Face the Nation.JPG
Created byFrank Stanton
Presented byBob Schieffer
(1991-present)
Narrated byJohn Wilcox
Country of origin United States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producerCarin Pratt
ProducerArlene Weisskopf
Production locationWashington D.C
Running time30 minutes
Production companyCBS News Productions
Original release
NetworkCBS
ReleaseNovember 7, 1954 –
present

Template:FixBunching Template:USSundayMorningNewsShows Template:FixBunching

Face the Nation with Bob Schieffer is an American Sunday-morning political interview show which premiered on the CBS television network on November 7, 1954. It is one of the longest-running news programs in the history of television. At 30 minutes, Face the Nation is the shortest of the Sunday talk shows. Excluding commercial breaks, the show has a duration of approximately 21 and a half minutes.

Each Sunday the moderator interviews newsmakers on the latest issues and delivers a short topical commentary at the end of the broadcast. The program broadcasts from Washington, D.C. Guests include government leaders, politicians, and international figures in the news. CBS News correspondents and other contributors engage the guests in a roundtable discussion focusing on current topics. The program broadcasts on the CBS Television Network, usually at 10:30 AM ET, right after CBS News Sunday Morning. Local affiliates are free to air the show at the time of their choosing, usually before noon local time. The show is also broadcast on a delay on a handful of radio affiliates through the CBS Radio Network.

Moderators

Ratings

April 19, 2009 All four networks grew week-to-week in Total Viewers, with just MTP up in the demo. But, year-to-year, ABC's This Week cut the Total Viewer gap for the 12 consecutive week. CBS grew 20% in Total Viewers compared to the same week last year, ABC was up 14% while NBC was down 1%.

Total Viewers: NBC: 3,440,000 / CBS: 2,940,000 / ABC: 2,890,000 / FOX: 1,310,000

25-54 demo: NBC: 1,250,000 / ABC: 940,000 / CBS: 930,000 / FOX: 430,000

Face the Nation in HD

Face the Nation is expected to begin broadcasting in High Definition in the near future.

External links